» The United States is sending 4.500 more troops to the revoltstricken cisms aS to:the actual working of this There have been legitimate criti- | Saar = “tired child syndrome” and street without.a driver, aman found that all were avid‘ TV | dashed from the sidewalk, clam- viewers. They spent three to six ered into the driver's seat and | general pest approached him | and attempted to start a con- Dominican Republic, -bringing the | 5 sage ; = oe as a it ae 7 : 4 s pee E . cc Te ergs <4 >.< = 2 Loni hours watching programs 0M sjammed on the brakes. A sec- versation with this tion, total of U.S. marines and army men | S€Fvice, but this is the ‘first time. 2 ae: ee eee < S a nee to 10 hours @ ond- man appeared from the “How many people work in week-e! , back of the car, puffing and yel- your office?” “Oh,” replied the to 14.000, ostensibly to guard -the question has been raised as to. the | ee r : = i ” : a i welt y were caught in a vic- | jing- * . _safety of 2,000 USS. citizens in the | pan ed the ee gov siah in "| A FINE EDUCATIONAL ASS ious efrcle. Their anxiety inter- | oes vo —— rg | ot Seles, Se at country. However, as U.S. military. | Providing such an organization. It is |= : fered with sleep and made them | tion, and you're the third quick | should say,-at a rough guess, : 3 more tired. In time they became | about two-thirds of them.— officials state, tye, function of this force is not only to protect the re- moval of U.S. citizens but also “to | see that no Communist government | is established there.” This is another ; matter of grave concern, provoking charges of “gunboat. diplomacy” -not only from Communist quarters_ but ~ from members of the Organization of an essential part of the system of un- employment i nce which was specifically plaéed under federal jurisdiction by an amendment to the British North America Act in 1940. | It is based on the concept of | Canada as a nation in whose’ oppor- tunities all Canadians—whether | French or English-speaking—have a | | right to share. To scrap this provision | i | | ' The presentation of, the budget is one of the highlights. of the ‘parliamentary. year entailing unusual restrictions and activi- ties in the interests of secrecy and urgency... Journalists could not the complicated proposals with- digest OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson How ReportsOn The Budget Get Written. ception in his own office, at- tended by more than two hun- dred journalists. and MPs Then he did something which no Fi-. nance Minister “has done be- fore: he cr the Ottawa Riv- er to visit the Government Print- ' ing Office in Hull, Quebec, to see t , , thinker. I've met in the last two too fatigued to do anything ex- " Reporter, cept watch television. Some de- Ripcks! Gok : veloped TV addiction during an illness, but,the majo: had an‘ emotional make-up cgnducive to Room Sixteen, a green and gold €xcess viewing. They were’ intro-. echo-drome which looks like a Vetted, quiet, sensitive, ' and cross between a harem and a turkish bath. We were greeted | an excellent lunch of-soup, steak | Promote relaxation and rest. Fa- Their parents were advised to by the Minister; and-again-those | abolish or limit television view- | arbiter of English ‘or at least departmental experts, so over | ing. Tranquilizers were given to Canadian) usage more influen-, and fiddleheads and fresh fruit | thers were encouraged to spend more time with their offspring. : The Word . The Canadian Press is not only a news gathering agency but an tial perhaps. than H.W. Fowler | or one's high school English According Ottawa Journal To CF get the widest possible agree- ment on spelling and style and CP offers a pretty good. starting. . point, American States as well. : sth Teen z , 7 be out explanations. nor re ort | the night watch there printing salad, washed down by a good g. | teacher : .. Latin-American reaction to the under any pretext would a retro- | hein accurately and swiftly, | the Hansard report of his bud- French red wine, that informal — oo — _CP ‘caps, no periods) has put r : presence of U.S. marines in their | area is understandable. The last time the marines ‘were sent to the Domin- ican Republic was in 1916. and they didn't entirely pull‘ out until 1934. In 1927 they landed in Nicaragua. ' financial: editors of some big | ter. Walter. Gordon. this vear | House at 2.30. | as if there could be no doubt at ~~ and remained until. 1933. These stays Canada under the new budget provis- newspapers. are admitted into! sent a persona! note to. “Iam like Pavolov’s dogs.” ap. | bee I wha stung by a large black aj that “co: education” require | wasted tn « ecaee of ii alt for-the | 10nS- It~must;~indeed;-be—a—matter};| tte huge — Ratlway—€ommittee— irty. j —* i a yellow_bumble bee on the _es the hyphen while “‘coexis- | resu eg - Room several hours before the he described as those “having | long custom made him my - tu aw- tence” goes plain. ~ . Tn: he rps } ~ was -the Sim — ‘ : : | that our trade barriers have been ; : Avitine : )—MISUNDERSTANDING— pemed to_b right until no ; of President Kennedy in his Alliance : | Speak. There, sworn to secrecy | BEWs”, g them to™ lunch NO MiSt? , rh i a0 ot: DeETSOr ¥ lowered by the budget. especially until release time, and locked | with him ‘on the day after the Wit t thorough series. of | sting seemed to be coming | pronouns, referring to the deity. for Progress to wipe out. No matter how justified’ Washington feels its present moves to be, the intervention is bound to-be resented. hohe issue, too. is anything but clear. The state department says the Dominican Republic’s two Communist parties and a Castroite group are par- _ ticipating actively in the rebel effort. The Dominican ambassador to.Wash- ington says the Cuban government is behind the revolution. But exiled . Juan Bosch. the elected leader of the Dominican Republic who was depos- ed—in—a—richtist-coup.in_1963—and_ whom Washington supported at that 4 time—warns that the right-wing |” grade step indeed. British Reaction Officials in London report a. flood of requests from companies wanting information about selling in of -satisfaetion. to British exporters | just by listening to the Minister of Finance delivering his bud- | | get address in the Commons. So | the “locked room” technique has grown up as a tradition on Parliament Hill. Members of the Press Gal- lery. reinforced by the visiting Finance Minister begins to get. speech. The following day, more anal- ¥tical interpretations and con- sidered reactions to the budget begin to germinate— in contrast. to the rush factual report of the | actual proposals. To assist this, the considerate Finance Minis- { special interests in financial with regard to the valuation-for-duty rules that decide whether goods are being dumped or not. Ottawa has now tacitly admitted what the British have argued for years, namely that a small, compact country’s distribution system cannot be compared with that of a? | big country. and that dumping re- strictions against its products should be adjusted accordingly. In--one p'mportant item, however, the new arrangement is still unsatis- factory. It doesn’t cover automobiles. Ottawa says the U.S.Canada auto o “free-trade” agreement was based ott the status quo and it would be a breach of faith with the U.S-owned discussion took place. After coffee, Walter Gordon | kewicz suggested that parents ; out a “Caps and Spelling’’ -book listing the most troublesome rose to‘his feet at 1.45 p.m. and | limit TV to less than two hours -words. proper names and ab- offered to answer questions—an offer which was avidly taken up to keep him busy fielding curve balls until the bells rang to an- nounce the opening of the 4 nd summons of-the-bells.- <7 a day. The anxiety returned in 11 of 13 who again were permit- “ted unrestricted television view- | * BEE STING H. E. H. writes: Last Septem- ‘| ing salve for three days and it. jn until the. Minister begins his , budget. “It seems to me that | speech. journalists may obtain tan, informal discussion «of any advance copies of the whole ions relating to the. budget speech. And to explain-the ar- would be very useful.” | cane financial mysteries, the ed. deputy minister of the Finance Thus we all gathered at 12.45 opportunities for questions, there ack. Please tell me what to can be no risk that Walter Gor- | 9°” .don’s budget will be criticized. This is Bl pandas outcome to in error. it sag Dut Ciieences of o- | a bee sting and your physician inion there certainly are, be- | : L tween the able Minister and his | SP0uld be consulted to determine Department and seva@! of” his | departmental experts are pres- ent. . - Thus for three hours. to the accompaniment of coffee and sandwiches and the clacking of one hundred typewriters, reports of the budget are written. and made ready to be telegraphed to mewspapers and _ broadcasting Stations. ‘ WORK—THEN PLAY : By long tradition also, when the Commons adjourns for the ‘day—at.10-_p.m.,...the.. Minister,. with his ordeal behind him. vis- its the lounge of the Press Gal- | lery where light banter. serious in ‘Parliament Hill's famed grateful guests. Why PM Stays Hom Canada’s ambassador to Tur- | problem. My pressure key sent word that a stopover in | Teason why Mr. Pearson called off an Easter recess visit to Canadian servicemen in Ger- The ambassador to Greece is | many, France. Cyprus and the upset because the PM's sup- | Gaza, Strip has come out. It posedly secret itinerary was seems that it was not, as was | presumably leaked by the Greek | announced. because of pressur- - Foreign Ministry, which neces- es—of...parliamentary.... business, sarily had to be informed. As he but the prospect of. being drawn says. only he and one of the em- imto the Greek-Turkish feud over Cyprus. “and we certainly did not talk’. Greece would affront the Turks. | bassy staff knew of the plan |. | whether this is a delayed reac- tion or a new unrelated lesion. WANTS MORE PEP Mrs. E. K. writes: You are al- Ways writing about high blood pressure. I have’ the opposite is 100, which keeps me under par. Is there any way to increase it so I would have more pep? REPLY : This would be difficult with- out using stimulants. A better plan is to start a physical fitness Program involving active exer- | cise. TODAY’S HEALTH ~“HINT— Don't overprotect your child. } (NOTE: All mee ~to-Dr.-Van-Dellen should be | breviations."" The men of CP “who acted as a kind of English Academy clearly had __ their hands full. But they render their | verdict with- a cool . assurance, “Bible” takes a capital; “bib- are capitalized except ‘‘who,” '“whem.”" and “whose.” A_mem-- ber of a provincial legislature is an MLA in every province’ ex---- cept Ontario where he is an MPP. It’s the Middle, not Near, r East. 3 We don't have much trouble in, thi? part of the world with “Smiths Falls’ ‘no apostrophe) — but what a relief to have it from CP that it’s ‘Gods Lake, Man.” and ‘that “‘Illecillewaet, BC” is the authorized version. There will also be general rejoicing to _ knéw that the Baathist party of Iraq rates a capital letter. | CP strikes a powerful blow for | “dissociate” (not ‘‘disassociate” | and ‘‘preventive’! ‘not ‘‘Preven- | tative’). It's “‘disfranchise”” and™ “dispatch,” not. “‘disenfranch- ‘ ise’’ and not “despatch.” | of | groups are raising the bogey of Cas- Cc : : questions .and . : ; ; = : : : ‘ « anadian auto companies to change _ . | a.needed scotc He had planned a side trip to Our man in Athens, “bythe ; troism.to-get-the U.S.to intervene on _ h les“now ae er ______ aid-soda provide a thirty-.min- | Macedonia, where he served as way, is Antonio Barrete, who addressed to: Dr. Theodore | palling oad eapttaliooton is to seri! ; | the rules now... ute~ postscript “to an eventful |"a Canadian soldier with the Bri-~~as~Union~—Nationale-premier—of---Vam_Dellen,co Chicago Trib- follow-simple-rather-than- fancy aa their behalf. ' To sensitive Latin-Americans the principle of collective action through their organization is all-important in matters of this kind. President John- According to an Ottawa dispatch -|: in the Financial Post, automobiles | were the subject of a hush-hushi meet- ing in Lotidon just prior to Mr. Gor- don’s budget delivery. It didn’t pro- day+~ i This year. ‘Some new events were introduced, perhaps found- ing new Budget- Day traditions. . The Minister held. a 10 pm. re tish Expeditionary Force against:| Quebec::was’ defeated. by. Jean | Turkey. in World War I. Al- Lesage and soon thereafter ap- | though he intended to stay away pointed to.Greece by the Diefen- | ees the.. Greek So eo _ baker. government. As a youth teria? ude seein nent 14 a pm =. agarbioeng was a workman | to.an implied endorsement of im the CNR roundhouse at Coch- % “ane, Chicago, Illinois, )~ :: . - * Our Yesterdays (From The Guardian Files) « ‘style. It avoids the dipthongs “‘ae’’ and ‘‘oe’’ wherever-it can: thus, “pediatrician,” ‘‘Mediev- al” and “ecumenical.” Apart .from proper names, CP prefers lower case wherever an option | exists “Royal Canadian Navy” | sapere capaho t i; coy i When you're a farmer and your own - boss, you a Pullman’ smoker when the | A . ad : : — : Rica. te , 2 * ap . : 4 i that - sage des: | advocate. and-it is not surprising that | a. - Che Guardian | it has met with adverse ‘criticism | Limit ] V NOTES BY THE WAY + rv. One> Bee Covers Prince Edward Isiend Like The Dew a App hil. For Child W 4. Hancox, Publisher . commentator compares it to the pa ° Stranger: “Say, mister, do you {| Women are doing most things Woellece ay foank — osophy which inspired the East Ger- By Dr. Theodore R. Van Bellen have a criminal im | ance reserved for men only Managing Editor I ? 3 Normal seldom al- Pa a ' Published every week day morning (except Sue | Man Cémmunists to erect the Berlin ae 7. ee Laeret i ag hae oo — — cars, play golf and day and statutory holidays) et 165 Prince Street. | Wall, to prevent their subjects stray- and rarely lose sleep over a | Vancouver Sun. want to do the dishes —— Hamil- Charlottetown P-E.1. by Thomson Newspapers Ltd. : 5 ‘ in West | good show. In this respect, view- ton S aoe Branch offices at Summerside. Montague. Alberton ing into greener pastures in e j ing television is no mere harm- j E * al 1 in 5 at toes Germany. ful than reading or listening to history has had to survive the A Cleveland man has asi old Represented nationally by Thomson Newspapers r . ses the radio. On the other hand. we | ; a Advertising Services Toronto 425 University Ave We in the AWantic Provinces, aa aeedaaiier weapons of his enemies and the television set with a two- inch Empire 3-8894 Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni where the unemployment problem is 4 te cation spends = eo ee at ame Fre e a geo _ more serious than in any other part hours in front of the set. This , . ” | day's shows.—London Fe re anadian Daily Newspaper Publishers , of canada. can well understand the | 7 as well as chil- |S udge: “You admit breaking Press. Associ d The Canadian Press The Canadian | 5 soot <i : ars | same shop three times. Press is ex ae a 5d ho a use for repub i need for policies that will build up + Parents a adolescents | What did you steal? Prisoner: _ The : value of international ication of. ‘ali mews dispatches in ths pacer |- Fegional employment opportunities | _— limit <aeeeieny “nee “A dress for my wits and hy fice ant Sa atanieee wedited to it o: the Associated Press of Kevters | 7 By Aus | youngster begins — sho ' made me exchange twice.""— was 000, an and cee . Soea aioe published herein. All i that will discourage the exodus of our - Trib A _ : : wah. 7 i - fight or republication of special dispatches here | people to other-and-busier.centres of - ' __| the Medical Tribune, a Untied — — year’s catch of mere’ then S8,- ries aes Soc tivity. We took sth issue ith | a ae 9 Geet a sk abe see | rarer Se Se | es ne $12.00 « year be ma! on nia! routes and areas | the Gordon economic commission re- oor ee: eS Pate é his. young patients over a period | _—s | atteckuaaes T hues dor Pee ro! -— ded by carrier ( re | port of some years ago. advocating | * “ae 2 five to nine-year-" olds | % er aes Sond waat's wine emqpoten gor Satis pe 15.00 year off Is'and and U 00 per | . 2 ! i : *s « ? ar ge 2c) alec thacs wcadde bah Cam 1 wont workers in distressed areas here had a variety of symptoms that | eae — to. ae @alicn ‘aes tek” @at Ge oe Porwealth ‘ : be subsidized to move elsewhere for were rena sae a Toronto Star ~ _| Dlind~but that he was @ poet. — vig eat ig 3 % Pes of Circulation employment. But this is a different and’ usable to sleep. Others had “How is Simpson getting — ¥ Stee. “The st rongest memory is weaker | thing from interfering with the right mt eget, — or com- | in business?” “Wonderfully; but | No matter how the dime has Scan ths wentvant <i" of every Canadian worker to make oe eae 2a neat ee 2 ey eet deteriorated oo metas tee PAGE « TUESDAY. MAY 4, 1965. . his own choice in this regard. with children crying, nail biting. | busy filling and shipping orders | will remain constant—it can. al- ees cae "| all the assistance that can be provid-- en ae —_ — | they haven't any time to hold a | ways be used as a screw driver. - Another Embroilment. ._” ed through a national employment | pediatrician, Dr. Richara—M. -Comerence. =Bostree) _ Stas. | —ESbore Independent. ~ ; a service. Narkewicz, called the condition geeing a car rolling down the | _ A certain business man was in TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO PUBLIC FORUM hould meet - a fi ee ou ie duce concrete results, but it report- Greece's Cyprus policy. rane, Ontario. (May 4, 1940) but plain “navy” when the full | T-dlesisy of force tip ereater thin | OLY nt tM improvement ttt Anglo | oo wee ae soos 1, high ‘ame Sle Ob oun |. ied eo tetae G : a display of force tar greater than Canadian relations atthe official | »» eronoendlieds, id euatheas ate: e i Ww “ m stationed at Crapaud, : anguage is alive, 2p : : : : fe eae . ae oat PEL, wa ined t there will be some points of di- was ever needed to protect a small | jeyel. The subject will be discussed | S* 3S a. eee aaa Europe's < Super a ays priesthood al ts Aagiies a Vided usage. Everyone has his : Church in a ceremony at All OW" ideas of what constitutes group of Americans, and is now. vir- tually committed to support a right- wing military junta in a conflict | which could, conceivably, involve a | genuine attempt to improve the lot of Tieasants and workers. The situation, from the propa- ganda standpoint. isn’t helped by the | fact that there are large United States business interests in the Do- minican Republic. and these interests are now being threatened: This is grist to the Communist mill in blast- ing “Yankee imperialists” for again meddling in Latin-American affairs for reasons of their own. - The: Wrong Approach Now. from Quebec. has come the demand that the federal government withdraw from the eriiployment ser- ‘| this demand last week was~Pfovin- cial Labor Minister Carrier Fortin. ‘Ft is unacceptable.” he said, “that | a. national service be used to acceler- ate the interprovincial mobility of the qualified work force in a context | where Ontario is a pole of attraction which is stronger than us.” In order to. achieve. its project of economic planning™Quebec must have its own exclusive employment service “total- ly devoted to the policies of this | province.” _ Mr...Fortin. and presumably his colleagues in the Lesage cabinet. ap- | parently feels that a national employ- | ment service which keeps, Quebec | workers informed about job oppor- tunities in other provinces runs coun: | ter to some right of the Quebec government to keep its workers at home. This is a dangerous course to vice field in hat. province. See ‘ \¥ EDIT ! RIZ again ‘next month at another higt- level meeting. to be held in Ottawa.- Meantime there is no sign of anv re-" duction in the price of automobiles’ in this country as a result of the agreement with Washington, not- withstanding the gains accruing to the manufacturers. As a result of the- new arrange-- ments in the budget, it will be up to the,Minister of National Revenue. not his officials, to make valuation de- cisions.:This could cause delays or. alternatively. if Canada has taken the political decision to help British ex- ports, if, could lead. to speédy action every time someoné)applies. Certain- ly it ‘will’ tend-to fix responsibility for action of the responsible minister of the Crown, not on his Subdrdin- ates, and. this in itself is.aBood thing. NOTES, British “army Officials haye ‘iyen up another tradition. Eli , is that paragraph that said: “The hair of the head will be kept short.” The Army Secretary has told the British House of Commons that the soldiers’ haircuts must still be tidy——_whatever that. means exactly—-but what he termed “the military crop” is a thing of the past. = What has happened to that legis- lation, passed nearly a year ago at Ottawa, authorizing. the cabinet to protect Canadian fishermen by ex- panding territorial waters with straight baselines? This question Was put in the Commons last week by Lloyd Crouse, P€ member for Queens-Lunenburg. But he got no reply. = * | ee’ PEI pendenis. All letiers peblished are sud ject to editing.amd condensation where @ecessary The Geardias is esable te enter imie aby corrrespendence regaré img oiletiers§ submitied. WORLD PEACE Sir.— What are the prospects of world peace? The sriter re- grets very much that he is com- pelled to say they are very slim indeed. A glance at the daily papers reveals that Before the dawn of history, war has been the Scourg> of mankind. Its destructive effects have been seen down throuch the ages. It looks as though it will continue to plague the human race until the Prince Hrnseif comes azaim,, Why? Tgely because of the | avarice y the unregenerated | heart of man, it cannot be oth- | erwise | Stop for 2 moment and think | it over, and you will have to ad- | mit the years of war in this old world greatly ‘ouf-number the years of peace. That. my friends. reflects the failure of peaceably with each other The writer has a vivid recgl- lection of the Boer War. Two of Charlottetown’s fine young men gave their lives in that war. Al- fred Riggs and Roland Taylor. Many of us have seen two de- Vasiating world wars. Today we have the Vietnamese war. and war between Pakistan and India. a squabble in the Dorm n- ican Republic. and even in the | tslands of St Pierre and Mique- lon there is a little hassle. There are far too many hot heads cul- tivating war hot beds. But we need not be alarmed For we have been forewarned of these things. The Most H .ca. speaking through the. inspired prophet Isaiah. said “There is ' no peace to the wicked.” and i Jeremiah im later vears. said | They say. Peace. Peace. when ~ there is no peace.” And friends’ There will be no real. lasting peace until the Prince of Peace Hienself comes. a h am, Sir, etc, : W_D. JOHNSTON Europe is entering the era of superhighways, toll booths, and motels. With a 10,000-mile network of Toads projected for 1970. snd some 4500 miles of it already in use. European countries are combining efforts to build the finest highway system there since Roman times Twenty-six major internation- alemotoring routes will span the continent from London to Istan- bu! and from Gibralter to Hel- sinki. It will soon be possibie for 2 motorist to driv® on the so- | called “E” routes from Nap!es to the Baltic virtually without stopping for a traffic ‘ight or in- tersection. TO NORTH CAPE Modern. machinery, much of it made in the United States, is ex- tending ribboms of concrete to unlikely places. Tourists ia Nor- Way can take their cars to North Cape. a point beyond the Arctic Circle A speedway in Belgium ‘aps the peoples of this,world.te.live.. over busy coal mines. Hizh ways. burrow beneath the snow-lock- | ed passes of Frances Vont/ Bianc, western Europe's highest peak. and a lower »oiat if Italy’s Pennine Alps just to the east. The Mont Blanc tunnel shortens the Paris-Rome road trip by 129 miles as compared to the old Rivier@ coastal route. Not even Paris has been able to resist the tyranny of the mot- or car The French capital plans a series of beltways simil- ar to the one surrounding Wash- ington, D.C. Paris is building a cross-city alonz the Seine. a part of the city always regarded as the special province of artists, elderly fishermen, and voung lovers. At the end of World War il, only Germany and Italy had «any dual roads specificaily de- signed for modern motor traf- fic. Now pastoral nations, as well -¢ their a otetized ‘neighbors, are in boom Spain and Portugal “ave ‘open- ed short stretches of their first perhighways. Europe's long: - itse suspension bridge, one, whose center span will reach up 2 stories, is being built across the broad Tagus at Lis- bon. z Northern Ireland also “has | completed a modest 'ength of | four-lane ‘“‘motorway." as divid- | ed highways generally are call- | ed in Europe, and proudly pro- claimed it off limits to pedes- trians, cyclists, animals, trac- tors, motorcycles, and “‘learner drivers.” With the building of roads has inevitably come the appearance of ultramodern service facilities | and motels. An international system of road signs, using mostly symbols rather than words, eases the strain of conti- nental driving. In prospect is a common highway code so mot- orists can drive anywhere with- out being confused by a hodge- | podge of regulations. FEAR NOTE LACK Australia’s federal treasurer, Harold Holt, says there may not be enough new dollar notes ready by February 1966 for the change-over from pound cur- | } ow ' Special McCULLOC Sexpipizo° ‘13 KEITH CARMICHAEL Brackley Pt. Rd. Saints Cathedral at Halifax. An- drew Pitcairn of Summerside was ordained a deacon. Rt. Rev. John MacKenley, Archbishop of Nova Scotia, presided. | It was rumored about Charlot- | tetown that there was a petition being circulated asking that the city be placed on Daylight Sav- ing Time during the summer | | months. TEN YEARS AGO (May 4, 1955) His. Worship. Mayor J. David Stewart cut the ribbon and handed the keys of the Charlot- tetown Civic Centre to Mr. George Fraser of the P.EL | Travel Bureau and to Mr. Carl Bird, general manager of the) SMT- Saint John,-N.B. A Walth- | em Gaudet, chairman of the. market committee, presided. J.E_ Creighan, Hughes Drug Co.; Allison M. Jewell, Jenkins Pharmacy: and Steve MacDon- ald, Reddin’s Drug Store, at- tended a_ retail photographic salesman’s training conference at the Eastman Kodak C om- pany’s sales training centre in- Rochester, N.Y. 3.6 H.-P. Out-Board) — Water Cooled ‘Regular $177. 500 Offer Expires April 20th t Ch’town an gk we correctness. Yet.the ideal is to Your Host | jn Halifax... Sheldon Hume . 2 ernie The Nova Scotian ©3225 moder rooms. Radio 4aTv. Pate frm $8.00 singe ” from single. Kiddies Family plan. free. © Room Servite. _ e Same laundéy and valet service, and beauty shops. © Sparkling hew cafeteria. @ Luxurious din ing room, fully @ Comfortable cocktail lounge. ' ; @ Executive suites, display . ee ene Come «@ Free parking facilities. @ Centrally located in down- town Halifax . The Newfoundland in St. John's offers equally fine Services and comforts. For reServations: Any travel agent orphone ~ 894 - 7371 3 The Nova Scotian EN ~~ _ Hotel - Murray Harbour P.ELL. Telephone 50-15 your Imperial Esso agent... who helps you get more for < what you do -because he's part of some- thing bigger... imperial Oil , eo